The one and the many: Early stochastic reasoning in philosophy

Annals of Science 34 (4):331-344 (1977)
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Abstract

From its beginnings religious philosophy confronted the challenge to reconcile Divine or natural determinism with man's moral freedom. In ancient Jewish thought, this gave rise to statistical ideas. In some Rabbinic texts, necessity is seen as inhering in collectives rather than in individuals. This is a statistical conception. Some miracles too were understood as highly improbable events, and remarkable phenomena were distinguished from usual ones. Medieval thinkers amplified and developed these ideas. Providential as well as natural determinism were explained as operating in large numbers of individual acts of free will, an idea later taken up by Kant

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Opticks.Isaac Newton - 1704 - Dover Press.
The guide for the perplexed.Moses Maimonides, Julius Guttmann & Chaim Rabin - 1904 - New York,: E. P. Dutton & co.. Edited by M. Friedländer.
On the prehistory of the theory of probability.O. B. Sheynin - 1974 - Archive for History of Exact Sciences 12 (2):97-141.

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